Scientific News Biology To unknown science animals and plants NEW 'BUMPY' JELLY FOUND IN DEEP SEA
NEW 'BUMPY' JELLY FOUND IN DEEP
SEA
Wart-like bumps of stinging cells cover the
feeding arms and bell of a newly described deep-sea jelly, published by MBARI
biologists in this month's issue of the Journal of the Marine Biological
Association of the United Kingdom. This softball-sized, translucent jelly moves
through the water like a shooting star, trailing four fleshy oral arms--but no
tentacles--behind it. This and other unique features resulted in the jelly's
categorization as a new genus and species.
The MBARI researchers named the jelly
Stellamedusa ventana. Its genus, Stellamedusa, refers to the jelly's translucent
blue-white color and trailing arms, which reminded the scientists of a
slow-moving meteor or shooting star. It's species name, ventana, refers to
MBARI's remotely operated vehicle (ROV) Ventana, a deep-diving submarine robot
that first recorded the jelly on video in 1990. Before they created an official
name for this animal, researchers gave this jelly the nickname "bumpy"
because it's bell and oral arms are covered with small bumps, which are actually
clusters of stinging cells that the jelly uses to capture prey.
Kevin
Raskoff, primary author of the paper, says
of the new jelly "Although it's highly unusual for a jelly not to have
tentacles, several deep-sea species have evolved this way. They have also
evolved unusual feeding strategies, which rely on other parts of their body,
such as the bell and oral arms, to capture prey." Formerly a postdoctoral
researcher at MBARI, Raskoff now teaches at California State University,
Monterey Bay.
MBARI researchers have seen S. ventana only seven
times during thirteen years of diving. Five of these observations were in
Monterey Bay. The other two occurred during an MBARI expedition to the Gulf of
California in spring 2003. According to George Matsumoto, co-author of the paper,
"This animal still represents a conundrum. At first we thought it might be
just a very rare local species, here in Monterey Bay. Then we saw it twice in
the Gulf of California, three thousand miles away. We still have no idea of its
true range."
The researchers waited years to publish their
discovery of this jelly because they wanted to be able to present information
about its habits and distribution, as well as its appearance. As Matsumoto put
it, "you need enough observations to understand the natural variations in
the animal's size and shape. We just didn't have enough information to make any
general statements about the animal."
Here is some of what they do know: S. ventana has
been observed at depths between 150 and 550 meters (about 500 to 1800 feet),
just below the level that sunlight can penetrate, but above a layer of very low
oxygen levels. This region is known as the mesopelagic realm, and is the home of
entire communities of gelatinous animals. In fact, based on field and lab
observations, the researchers believe that this jelly may feed primarily on
other jellies.
To study the jelly's eating habits, the
researchers placed a captured jelly in a tank with small shrimp and pieces of
squid. The shrimp and squid collided with batteries of stinging cells on the
jelly's bell and stuck there. The prey then moved slowly down to the edge if the
bell. At that point, the jelly transferred the prey to one of its oral arms,
where it slowly moved up the arm and into the mouth.
Unlike other jellies who capture food with their
bells, S. ventana seemed to prefer prey larger than about 2 cm (3/4 inch). In
fact, one individual captured in the Gulf of California had in its gut a
ctenophore about 5 cm (2 inches) across. Raskoff speculates that the bumps on
the jelly's bell and arms may aid in capturing large pray. "These bumps
contain massive batteries of stinging cells, which are good for holding on to
prey as well as immobilizing it."

Matsumoto is somewhat surprised that S. ventana
has never been described previously or hauled up in nets. "The coast of
California is one of the more well-studied parts of the world's oceans, with two
major oceanographic institutions dating from the late 1800s. Yet we are still
discovering new species there. Who knows what else we might find?" Raskoff
adds, "It's heartwarming to know that there's still a lot of mystery in the
deep ocean. There are still a lot of big things moving around out there that we
don't know about."
###
Images available at http://www.mbari.org/news/news_releases/2004/stellamedusa-images.html.
Video b-roll available on request.
Research article: K. A. Raskoff and G. I.
Matsumoto, Stellamedusa ventana, a new mesopelagic scyphomedusae from the
eastern Pacific representing a new subfamily, the Stellamedusinae. 2004. Journal
of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom. 84, 4274/1-6.
Contact: Kim Fulton-Bennett, kfb@mbari.org,
831-775-1835, Monterey
Bay Aquarium Research Institute
Publishing date: February 10, 2004
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